“I’m rooting for Rose and Michael,” the former ‘Mad Men’ star tells HuffPostUK. “They have three kids, and they’re happy.”

Of course, it wouldn’t be Sunday night primetime drama without a spoke in the wheel of that union, and that comes in the form of Aaron’s character Captain Ronald Dreyfuss.

The show, which debuted on BBC One last night, follows the community of fictional village of Moybeg in Northern Ireland, disrupted by the outbreak of World War II, the installation of a US airbase, with its dashing pilots, their jets, Jeeps and jackets.

At the heart of the tale, Michael Coyne (Owen McDonnell) is disturbed when his daughter is courted by a young airman, but that’s nothing compared with the potential disruption to his household, when his wife Rose (Hattie Morahan) finds she has more in common with dashing Captain Dreyfuss than she does with many of her adopted townsfolk.

The pair first meet in the lush settings of a waterside encounter and Aaron tells HuffPostUK he was as taken by the Irish backdrop as his screen alter ego.

“I moved there to film with my wife, and we found ourselves in pubs, country walks, the Giant Causeway,” he beams. “It was beyond stunning, and if there’s any way Captain Dreyfuss has more story to tell in Series 2, I’ll be there.”

‘My Mother And Other Strangers’ continues on BBC One on Sunday evenings. You can catch up with Episode 1 on BBCiPlayer.